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16 January 2026
Issue: 8145 / Categories: Legal News , Profession , Risk management , Property , Landlord&tenant
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NLJ this week: Mind the registration gap

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Delays at HM Land Registry are no longer a background irritation but a growing source of professional risk. Writing in NLJ this week, Phil Murrin of DAC Beachcroft explores how the ‘registration gap’—now stretching up to two years in complex cases—is fuelling client frustration, priority disputes, and negligence claims

The article situates the problem within the Land Registry’s Strategy 2025+, which candidly concedes that processes are slow and that there is no quick fix, despite ambitious plans for digitisation and AI-assisted workflows.

Murrin explains why equitable title during prolonged gaps complicates everything from landlord notices to enfranchisement, while also creating cost and reputational pressures for firms. His practical guidance urges lawyers to adapt drafting, monitor applications proactively, resolve requisitions substantively, and assume long delays as the new normal.

The message is blunt: the gap is a problem of our time, and firms must manage it or absorb the risk.

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Clarke Willmott—Matthew Roach

Clarke Willmott—Matthew Roach

Partner joins commercial property team in Taunton office

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Londstanding London firm appoints new senior partner

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Commercial team in London welcomes technology specialist as partner

NEWS
What safeguards apply when trust corporations are appointed as deputy by the Court of Protection? 
Disputing parties are expected to take part in alternative dispute resolution (ADR), where this is suitable for their case. At what point, however, does refusing to participate cross the threshold of ‘unreasonable’ and attract adverse costs consequences?
When it comes to free legal advice, demand massively outweighs supply. 'Millions of people are excluded from access to justice as they don’t have anywhere to turn for free advice—or don’t know that they can ask for help,' Bhavini Bhatt, development director at the Access to Justice Foundation, writes in this week's NLJ
When an ex-couple is deciding who gets what in the divorce or civil partnership dissolution, when is it appropriate for a third party to intervene? David Burrows, NLJ columnist and solicitor advocate, considers this thorny issue in this week’s NLJ
NLJ's latest Charities Appeals Supplement has been published in this week’s issue
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